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Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma. 20th Anniversary Updated Edition PDF

287 Pages·2014·2.21 MB·English
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women k chicana and chicano m a s s a c r e This new edition of an immensely influential book gives voice to Mexic-Amerindian c women silenced for hundreds of years by the dual censorship of being female and brown- a skinned. Castillo introduced the term “Xicanisma” to replace “Chicana feminism,” s including mestizas on both sides of the border. In history and myth, interviews, and t o f t h e i ethnography, she explores all aspects of their identity. Her book remains a compelling l d r e a m e r s document, enhanced here with revisions throughout and a new afterword. l o “It is easy to accept traditions as a jail called Destiny, but you need courage to conquer your identity as a road to freedom. . . . Fighting for her past, fighting against her past, essays on xicanisma Ana Castillo helps clear a collective way out. This is a book of footprints.” 20th anniversary updated edition m —eduardo galeano, author of the Memory of Fire Trilogy a “Brilliant and powerfully written. . . . These essays are testimony and proof of a . . . s revolutionary consciousness signaling change and real hope.” s —ms. magazine a c “Castillo goes after our hearts and minds, not territory or power.” r —village voice e “What I admire about this book is its insistent demand for justice.” o —matthew rothschild, The Progressive f “At times brilliant, at times angry, at times poignant, but at all times riveting.” t —maría herrera-sobek, coeditor of Chicana Creativity h and Criticism: New Frontiers in American Literature e d ana castillo, a novelist and poet, is also the author of Give r © It to Me, The Guardians, So Far From God, and Peel My Love Like e na an Onion. In 2013 she received the Gloria E. Anzaldúa Award a oli M from the American Studies Association for her essay “The Real m A. obert athnids Tbrouoek .Meaning of Our Lady of Guadalupe,” the afterword to e ana c astillo R r s Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award foreword by clarissa pinkola estés from the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights ISBN 978-0-8263-5358-0 90000 university of new mexico press unmpress.com • 800-249-7737 9 780826353580 > m a s s a c r e o f t h e d r e a m e r s m a s s a c r e o f t h e d r e a m e r s essays on xicanisma 20th anniversary updated edition a n a c a s t i l l o foreword by clarissa pinkola estés university of new mexico press • albuquerque © 2014 by Ana Castillo Foreword © 2014 by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés All rights reserved. Published 2014 Printed in the United States of America 19 18 17 16 15 14 1 2 3 4 5 6 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Castillo, Ana. Massacre of the dreamers : essays on Xicanisma / Ana Castillo. — Twentieth Anniversary updated edition. pages cm Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 978-0-8263-5358-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8263-5359-7 (electronic) 1. Mexican American women. 2. Feminism—United States. I. Title. E184.M5C369 2014 305.48’86872073—dc23 2014006361 cover photograph: Milky Way over Bromo by Abdul Azis, courtesy of Getty Images book design: Catherine Leonardo Composed in ScalaOT Reg. 10.5/15 Display type is ScalaSansOT For my ancestors and to the next seven generations in Her Name, Nuestra Madre Diosa Anyone dreaming anything about the end of the Empire was ordered to the palace to tell of it. Night and day emissaries combed the city, and Tenochtitlán paid tribute in dreams. . . . But finding no good in the thousands offered, Moctezuma killed all the offenders. It was the massacre of the dreamers, the most pathetic of all. . . . From that day there were no more forecasts, no more dreams, terror weighed upon the spirit world. —laurette sejourne, Burning Water: Thought and Religion in Ancient Mexico Queen Xochitl . . . legendary queen of the Toltecs. During her reign women were called to war service. She headed the battalions and was killed in battle; legend has it that as she died, blood streamed from her wounds, foretelling the scattering of the Toltec nation. —marta cotera, Profile on the Mexican American Woman Perhaps the greatest harm patriarchy has done to us is to strife, co-opt, and reform our powers of imagination. Moralisms, dualistic dogmas, repressive prohibitions block our imagination at its sources, which is the fusion of sexual and spiritual energies. —monica sjöö and barbara mor, The Great Cosmic Mother: Rediscovering the Religion of the Earth vii contents k Foreword by Clarissa Pinkola Estés xi Acknowledgments xix Introduction 1 chapter one A Countryless Woman: The Early Feminista 17 chapter two The 1986 Watsonville Women’s Strike: A Case of Mexicana/Chicana Activism 39 chapter three The Ancient Roots of Machismo 65 chapter four Saintly Mother and Soldier’s Whore: The Leftist/Catholic Paradigm 91 chapter five In the Beginning There Was Eva 113 chapter six La Macha: Toward an Erotic Whole Self 131 chapter seven Brujas and Curanderas: A Lived Spirituality 153 ix

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Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award from the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human RightsThis new edition of an immensely influential book gives voice to Mexic Amerindian women silenced for hundreds of years by the dual censorship of being female and indigenous. Castillo replace
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